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Ultrasonic noise emissions from wind turbines: potential effects on bat species

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conference contribution
posted on 2012-03-26, 13:51 authored by Chloe V. Long, Paul LepperPaul Lepper, James A. Flint
The impact that wind turbines have on the environment, particularly with respect to wildlife such as bat species, has generated increasing concern over the last decade. Although the harnessing of wind power is becoming much more widespread as a clean, renewable energy resource, the increasing global turbine mortality rates for bats are thought to be significantly detrimental to susceptible species. Much research is still needed to fully understand the ways in which turbines affect bats, since they rely on echolocation and audible cues to hunt and navigate, therefore having a unique acoustic perspective of objects in their vicinity. Here we present an overview of what is currently known regarding ultrasonic emissions from operational wind turbine structures, including noise generated from the gearing mechanism, rotor, or through blade defects, and how such noise may be perceptible to some bat species in the local turbine habitat.

History

School

  • Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering

Citation

LONG, C.V., LEPPER, P.A. and FLINT, J.A., 2011. Ultrasonic noise emissions from wind turbines: potential effects on bat species. IN: 10th International Congress on Noise as a Public Health Problem (ICBEN2011), 24th-28th July 2011, London. Proceedings of the Institute of Acoustics, 33 (3), pp. 907 - 913

Publisher

© Institute of Acoustics

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Publication date

2011

Notes

This is a conference paper. It is available from; http://www.icben.org/2011/pdf/ICBEN2011.pdf#page=907

ISBN

9781906913076

ISSN

1478-6095

Publisher version

Language

  • en

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